Some historical and global examples of tax resistance → Ireland → Blue Shirts in 1934 → Michael Patrick Lynch

From the Norwalk Hour:

Irish Blue Shirts Will Not Pay Taxes

General Eoin O’Duffy’s Blue Shirt Party are on record with a resolution pledging its refusal to pay annual land taxes so long as President De Valera continues the trade dispute with Great Britain.

The resolution was passed at the annual conference of the Blue Shirt Party, a conference which was attacked by a mob of 1,000 persons throwing rocks.

Numerous persons were injured in the fighting, adding to the casualties suffered throughout the week of scattered disorders following upon tax sale troubles at Cork last Monday.

The Blue Shirts — The United Ireland Party — pledged themselves to resist the seizure of lands and cattle by the government for non-payment of taxes.

Another version adds this detail:

The resolution was [passed] at the annual party conference after a weekend of bitter hand-to-hand fighting in which a number of Blue Shirts emerged with cracked heads.

The Blue Shirts also pledged resistance to seizure of lands and cattle and similar government acts which led to the riot at Cork last Monday. While the conference was sitting, County Cork farmers felled trees in the roads, cut telephone wires and made other efforts to prevent further seizure of cattle for unpaid annuities.

An earlier dispatch gives more details on what had been going on in Cork:

Six Blue Shirts were standing guard today over the body of a farmer killed in ’s riot, when police fired upon a crowd attempting to prevent the forced sale of cattle seized for non-payment of taxes.

The fact that Blue Shirts were the death watch was interpreted here as indicating that General Owen O’Duffy’s Fascist United Ireland party were behind the riot. This belief was further strengthened by a report that E.J. Cussen, member of the executive committee of the Blue Shirts, was one of the many wounded.

Eleven farmers arrested during the riot appeared in police court and were remanded for further investigation.

, the Associated Press reported on the funeral:

Thousands of farmers and their women folks turned out in an orderly demonstration at the funeral of young Michael Patrick Lynch, who was killed by police during a fight at a tax sale . Lynch was a member of the opposition “Blue Shirt” party, and its leader, Eoin O’Duffy, came here from Dublin for the services.

After the funeral O’Duffy declared the condition of Irish farmers is now as bad as when the famine of 80 years ago caused many to emigrate to North America. Thousands of persons lined the streets and marched in the procession as Lynch was buried. Many wore bandages over wounds inflicted in the terrific battle in which he was killed as he drove a motor lorry through police lines to prevent the sale of two neighbors’ cattle for taxes.

O’Duffy demanded that police engaged in the affray be dismissed, accusing them of responsibility for the shooting.

“Farmers’ cattle and furniture have been seized,” he said, “and farmers have been imprisoned unlawfully. Several times I have called upon the Government to make a settlement of the land war, but they have reduced the farmer to the position he was in when the great famine came 80 years ago.”

Although the Free State Government has stopped paying land annuities to Great Britain, collection of the money from farmers has continued, the proceeds being held in a special treasury fund.

Farmers throughout Munster observed an hour’s cessation from work during the funeral, and shopkeepers were asked to close their places of business. There were no disorders , but O’Duffy’s car was attacked without serious results. A number of “Blue Shirts” were beaten later as they were returning to their homes after escorting Lynch’s coffin from an undertaking establishment to the church.


Thousands of old newsreels from the British Pathé archives have been posted to YouTube. Here are a handful that show some rare motion picture footage of tax resistance actions of the past:

The nicest way of being Arrested

“Tired of waiting — women councillors arrange by telephone with Sheriffs Officer to be taken to prison altogether at 3 o’clock!” This was part of the Poplar Rates Rebellion of (silent):

Les obsèques des ouvriers de l’usine Krupp…

Footage of the funerals of (and commemorative parade for) of Krupp factory workers killed during the strikes of the Ruhrkampf in (silent):

Footage of Gandhi

Here’s some footage released in soon after his imprisonment for sedition. It shows him addressing an outdoor Indian National Congress meeting (silent):

This comes from , at the time of the Salt March, and shows Gandhi addressing a crowd and large groups of people in “Gandhi caps” walking along with him (silent):

Rideaux Baissés et Portes Closes

Parisian shopkeepers and businesses shut down one afternoon in in a hartal to protest against new taxes (silent):

Footage of Irish Blue Shirts

This comes from a point in when the quasi-fascist Blue Shirt party had launched a tax strike. One person was killed by police during an attempt to stop a tax auction of seized cattle, and this newsreel shows footage of the funeral (silent):

Tax & Taxis!

Parisian taxi drivers blockade the streets outside the Chamber of Deputies in a tax protest:

Farmers Protest

Belgian farmers drive their tractors into the provincial capital in to protest a new tax, and a pitchfork-waving, paving-stone-throwing, tire-burning riot ensues:

Footage of a large meeting with Pierre Poujade speaking

From , by which time Poujade was trying to transform his regional tax protest into a national political party (silent):